CLINTON, George,(father
of George Clinton [1771-1809] and uncle of De Witt Clinton and James Graham
Clinton), a Delegate from New York and a Vice President of the United States;
born in Little Britain, Ulster (now Orange) County, N.Y., July 26, 1739;
completed preparatory studies; served as lieutenant of rangers in the expedition
against Fort Frontenac; studied law; was admitted to the bar and commenced
practice in Little Britain; clerk of the court of common pleas in 1759 and
district attorney in 1765; surveyor of New Windsor; member of the State assembly
in 1768; served on the New York Committee of Correspondence in 1774; Member of
the Continental Congress from May 15, 1775, to July 8, 1776, when he was ordered
to take the field as brigadier general of militia; appointed brigadier general
by Congress in March 1777; Governor of New York 1777-1795; president of the
State convention which ratified the Federal Constitution; again Governor of New
York 1801-1804; elected Vice President of the United States in 1804 as a
Republican and served four years under President Thomas Jefferson; reelected in
1808 and served under President James Madison until his death in office; died in
Washington, D.C., April 20, 1812; interment in the Congressional Cemetery;
reinterment in the First Dutch Reformed Church Cemetery, Kingston, N.Y., in May
1908.- -Biographical
Data courtesy of the Biographical Directory of the United States Congress.
George Clinton - Vice President - Patriot - Klos Family Project
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Clinton, George statesman, born
in Little Britain, Ulster County, New York. 26 July, 1739; died in Washington,
D.C., 20 April, 1812. On his return from a privateering cruise in 1758, he
accompanied his father and brother James in the expedition against Fort
Frontenac as a lieutenant, and, on the disbanding of the colonial forces. he
studied in the law-office of William Smith, and settled in his birthplace,
receiving shortly afterward a clerkship from the colonial governor, Admiral
George Clinton, a connection of the family. He was elected in 1768 to the New
York assembly, where he so resolutely maintained the cause of the colonies
against the crown that, on 22 April, 1775, he was elected by the New York
provincial convention one of the delegates to the second continental congress,
taking his seat on 15 May. He did not vote on the question of independence, as
the members of the New York provincial congress, which he represented, did not
consider themselves authorized to instruct their delegates to act on that
question. They purposely left it to the new provincial congress, which met at
White Plains, 8 July, 1776, and which, on the next day, passed unanimously a
resolution approving of the declaration. Clinton was likewise prevented from
signing the declaration with the New York delegation on 15 July, by receiving,
on the 7th of that month, an imperative call from Washington
to take post in the Highlands, with rank as general of militia.
In the spring of 1777 he was a deputy to the New York provincial congress,
which framed the first state constitution, but was again called into the field
by congress, and appointed, 25 March, 1777, a brigadier-general in the
Continental army. Assisted by his brother James, he
made a brilliant, though unsuccessful, defense, 6 Oct, 1777, of the Highland
forts, Clinton and Montgomery, against Sir Henry
Clinton. He was chosen first governor of the state, 20 April, 1777, and in
1780 was re-elected to the office, which he retained by successive elections
until 1795. From the period of his first occupation of the gubernatorial chair
until its final relinquishment he exhibited great energy of character, and, in
the defense of the state, rendered important services, both in a civil and
military capacity.
In 1780 he thwarted an expedition led by Sir John Johnson, Brant, and Corn
planter, into the Mohawk valley, and thus saved the settlers from the horrors of
the torch and scalping-knife. He was active in preventing encroachments on the
territory of New York by the settlers of the New Hampshire grants, and was
largely instrumental with Timothy Pickering
in concluding, after the war, lasting treaties of peace with the western
Indians. In 1783 he accompanied Washington and Hamilton on a tour of the
northern and western posts of the state, on their return visiting, with Schuyler
as a guide, the High-Rock Spring at Saratoga. While on this trip he first
conceived the project of a canal between the Mohawk and Wood creek, which he
recommended to the legislature in his speech opening the session of 1791, an
idea that was subsequently carried out to its legitimate end in the Erie and
Champlain canals by his nephew, Governor De Witt Clinton.
At the time of Shays's rebellion, 1787, he marched in person, at the head of
the militia, against the insurgents, and by this prompt action greatly aided the
governor of Massachusetts in quelling that outbreak. In 1788 he presided at the
state convention to ratify the Federal
constitution, the adoption of which he opposed, believing that too much
power would thereby pass to the Federal congress and the executive. At the first
presidential election he received three of the electoral votes cast for the
vice-presidency.
In 1792, when Washington was re-elected,
Clinton had for the same office fifty votes, and at the sixth presidential
election, 1809-'13, he received six ballots from New York for the office of
president. In 1800 he was chosen to the legislature after one of the most hotly
contested elections in the annals of the state; and in 1801 he was again
governor. In 1804 he was elected vice-president of the United States, which
office he filled until his death. His last important public act was to negative,
by his casting vote in the senate, the renewal of the charter of the United
States bank in 1811. He took great interest in education, and in his message at
the opening session of the legislature of 1795 he initiated the movement for the
organization of a common-school system.
As a military man, Clinton was bold and courageous, and endowed with a will
that rarely failed him in sudden emergencies. As a civil magistrate he was a
stanch friend to literature and social order. In private life he was
affectionate, winning, though dignified in his manner, strong in his dislikes,
and warm in his friendships. The vast influence that he wielded was due more to
sound judgment, marvelous energy, and great moral force of character, than to
any specially high-sounding or brilliant achievements.
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